Hokae. I saw some people ask for a review of this gun in another thread, and theres also absolutely zero good reviews anywhere else online, so here it goes.

So Here's the gun (obviously yours will be shiny and new with cheap orangy-red chinese wood stain, but its easy to restain wood so nbd)

Its a VFC/Real Steel style take down, so all you need to take it apart is a phillips screw driver, a hammer, and a metal punch of some sort
Its all steel and real wood. The only pot metal part that I know of is the rear sight block.

You have to be careful with the sight block. Mine broke, so my rear sight is JB Welded on

The area circle in green is the part that likes to break

The hop up is actually really good. Its a full metal hop up and there should be no need to replace it or any part of it besides a new bucking after a while.

I'm too lazy to open up the gearbox and take pictures, but its just the standard black CYMA gearbox
On the plus side its got:
a metal ball bearing spring guide
the piston seems sound and durable
nice steel gears
and the motor is actually quite good

On the down side:
the stock spring is WAY too heavy. Replace immediately
the piston head works fine, but it's nothing to get exited about - probly replace with a ported one with bearings
the cylinder head isnt the greatest but it works for now
its got a cheap clear plastic air nozzle that you might want to replace
Cheap brass cylinder. but it works fine

All in all it actually gets good compression

I'm not going to bother you with pointless grouping shots. What counts is that it has an effective range of around 180 ft. and its quite possible to hit a man sized target at 200 ft.

Overall, the build quality is excellent, theres no wobbles or creaks its completely solid. It had great accuracy and range.
Out of the box all it needs is to have the spring replaced with something lower powered (an M100 or M110 would probably be best)

Also the 8.4v battery it comes with is a little underpowered, so I recommend a 9.6v. Crane stock or nun-chuck type batteries work best

I considered that gun, but the FPS was too high, and I have never opened a gun so I didn't want to open it up right after buying it. In my opinion, it has the best wood on any AK I've seen in the Airsoft world.

wait, you weathered this yourself?
Do tell, also how did you restain the wood so nicely? Being real wood the stock is usually too skinny to sand or else it may crack into the battery well.

It was really easy actually. Just use a sanding sponge and take off all the cheap orange paint they used. It's not very thick. and staining is the same as you would do for any other piece of wood, just stain, let dry, and repeat until it's as dark as you want it.
For the weathering I just looked at a ton of Russian military photos to get an idea of how much to do, and theres also some good guides on red-alliance